Jeff Lugar of Virginia wins the B.A.S.S. Nation Championship and, along with five other B.A.S.S. Nation division winners, will compete in the Bassmaster Classic in February. (THE COURIER / Shaye Baker, Bassmaster.com)

Jeff Lugar of McGaheysville, Va., only wanted for his sons to be able to say that their dad made it to the Bassmaster Classic.

And now, after Lugar’s win Saturday at the 2013 B.A.S.S. Nation Championship on Lake Dardanelle, they can.

“I wanted to leave them a legacy and make them proud,” said Lugar, father to Travis, 18, and Tyler, 13. “They both love to hunt and fish, and when we go fishing together, they only want to out fish their dad.

“At this point, it doesn’t even matter to me if I catch a fish in the Bassmaster Classic. Just the fact that I made it means everything.”

At the Classic, Lugar will be joining five other B.A.S.S. Nation anglers who qualified on Saturday after winning their divisions. They are Doug Thompson of Arkansas, Central; Paul Mueller of Connecticut, Eastern; Mark Dove of Indiana, Northern; Coby Carden of Alabama, Southern; and Tim Johnston of Montana, Western.

The six anglers will compete against the best anglers in the sport of bass fishing in February on Lake Guntersville in Alabama.

“I’m so thankful to the Virginia B.A.S.S. Nation for getting me here,” said Lugar, a member of the Rockingham Bass Anglers. “The Virginia chapter helped offset the cost of this trip, and the state president and secretary, Mike and Pam Bryant, came with me to Arkansas and have given me anything I could possibly need. They’ve been great.”

For his win, Lugar takes home the coveted Bryan V. Kerchal Memorial trophy and a Skeeter/Yamaha boat package worth $45,000. He also has earned an invitation to fish the 2014 Bassmaster Elite Series.

Lugar won the tournament by fishing coontail grass in the lower end of the lake.

“I had two main areas, Dardanelle Bay and Delaware Bay,” he said.

He picked apart the grass with a chartreuse/white spinnerbait, a blue shad ChatterBait and a chrome blue Rat-L-Trap. Lugar relied on G.Loomis IMX rods, a Lew’s Tournament Pro reel and Berkley Trilene 100 Percent Fluorocarbon. He switched to Berkley Trilene Big Game line for the spinnerbait.

“I found baitfish holding around the coontail in these areas 2 to 4 feet deep,” Lugar explained. “My areas were close to the launch — one was right across from it — so I could maximize my fishing time.”

Lugar came to Lake Dardanelle in September for two days to pre-fish and found the coontail.

“Since then, it’s changed a little,” he said. “Some is gone, and some is new. But coming on that trip taught me to navigate this lake, so it was worth it.”

Behind him in second place overall was Carden of Shelby, Ala., who charged from 13th place where he began Day 3. Carden surprised the crowd with an enormous 7-pound, 10-ounce bass, far bigger than the others in the competition. His big fish won him Carhartt Big Bass honors worth $500. Thanks largely to that bass, Carden brought in the biggest sack of the tournament, 20 pounds, 14 ounces.

Carden caught the bass with a Davis swim jig with a Missile Baits Swim Trailer in the summer craw color. He caught it shallow in an area with willow grass and lily pads.

Carden is among the anglers headed to the Bassmaster Classic.

“I’ve wanted to go since I knew what the Classic was, back when I was a kid,” Carden said.

Dove will be making back-to-back appearances at the Classic. He went last year as the B.A.S.S. Nation Championship overall winner, and he’s going back in 2014 as the Northern Division champ. He also qualified once before in 1997.